Tales of Three Hemispheres by Lord (Edward J. M. D. Plunkett) Dunsany
page 28 of 87 (32%)
page 28 of 87 (32%)
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to the wayfarer, but resented the reticence that he displayed to them
though they had given him beer; it was to them as though a master key had failed to open a cupboard. And, as for me, curiosity held me down to my chair and forbade me to interfere on behalf of the sack; for the old man's furtive ways, and the night out of which he came, and the hour of his coming, and the look of his sack, all made me long as much to know what he had, as even the blacksmith, the carpenter and the postman's son. And then they found the emeralds. They were all bigger than hazel nuts, hundreds and hundreds of them: and the old man screamed. "Come, come, we're not thieves," said the blacksmith. "We're not thieves," said the carpenter. "We're not thieves," said the postman's son. And with awful fear on his face the wayfarer closed his sack, whimpering over his emeralds and furtively glancing round as though the loss of his secret were and utterly deadly thing. And then they asked him to give them just one each, just one huge emerald each, because they had given him a glass of beer. Then to see the wayfarer shrink against his sack and guard it with clutching fingers one would have said that he was a selfish man, were it not for the terror that was freezing his face. I have seen men look sheer at Death with far less fear. And they took their emerald all three, one enormous emerald each, while the old man hopelessly struggled till he saw his three emeralds |
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